Damon van Dam tried to reassure his wife while they awaited the verdicts by touching her shoulder. Brenda van Dam frequently held her husband's hand.

The jurors -- six men and six women -- received the case on August 8.

Westerfield was charged with the felony murder and kidnapping of Danielle, a neighboring family's child who was abducted from her suburban San Diego home in February.

Under the felony murder charge, he was accused of killing Danielle during the commission of another crime -- kidnapping -- a special circumstance which would make him eligible for capital punishment.

The jury unanimously found that special circumstance to be true.

Westerfield also was found guilty on a misdemeanor count of possessing child pornography.

Prosecutor Jeff Dusek alleged that Westerfield abducted Danielle from her bedroom in suburban San Diego late February 1 or early February 2 and took her to his house, two doors away. Her father and two brothers were asleep, and her mother had gone out for the evening.

Dusek said matching orange fibers were found in Westerfield's home and on a necklace Danielle had been wearing. A forensic DNA specialist testified that her hair, blood and fingerprints were found in Westerfield's house and in his recreational vehicle parked outside.

Feldman said it was the lifestyle of the child's parents that set the stage for her murder, not by Westerfield but by someone the couple had unwittingly befriended.

Brenda and Damon van Dam testified about smoking marijuana and knowingly allowing each other to have sex with others, a practice known as "swinging," which "put their children at risk," Feldman charged.

Much of the defense testimony centered on information from scientists who study bugs on bodies to determine time of death.

Two forensic entomologists hired by the defense said their analyses suggested Danielle's body was dumped along the desert roadside in mid-February, long after police had placed Westerfield under surveillance.

The court will reconvene next Wednesday to begin testimony in the penalty phase. Judge Mudd said a gag order would remain in place until the penalty phase is complete.

CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin said the defense strategy will shift to show the jury that "this act was an aberration, that their client is an honorable family man."

Prosecutors, Toobin added, will counter by "focusing on the monsterousness of this act, and that there were signs that Westerfield was a sexual predator."

The Westerfield trial received extensive national coverage, in part because it is the first case in a series of child abductions and killings this year that has made it to trial.

Danielle's death has been followed by a series of child abduction cases this year, including those of Elizabeth Smart in Utah; Samantha Runnion in California; Cassandra Williamson in Missouri; Erica Pratt in Philadelphia; and two teen-age girls in California last week. Samantha and Cassandra were found dead.